Let other pens dwell on guilt and
misery. I quit such odious subjects as soon
as I can, impatient to restore everybody, not greatly
in fault themselves, to tolerable comfort, and to
have done with all the rest.
My Fanny, indeed, at this very time,
I have the satisfaction of knowing, must have been
happy in spite of everything. She must have been
a happy creature in spite of all that she felt, or
thought she felt, for the distress of those around
her. She had sources of delight that must force
their way. She was returned to Mansfield Park,
she was useful, she was beloved; she was safe from
Mr. Crawford; and when Sir Thomas came back she had
every proof that could be given in his then melancholy
state of spirits, of his perfect approbation and increased
regard; and happy as all this must make her, she would
still have been happy without any of it, for Edmund
was no longer the dupe of Miss Crawford.
It is true that Edmund was very far
from happy himself. He was suffering from disappointment
and regret, grieving over what was, and wishing for
what could never be. She knew it was so, and
was sorry; but it was with a sorrow so founded on
satisfaction, so tending to ease, and so much in harmony
with every dearest sensation, that there are few who
might not have been glad to exchange their greatest
gaiety for it.
Sir Thomas, poor Sir Thomas, a parent,
and conscious of errors in his own conduct as a parent,
was the longest to suffer. He felt that he ought
not to have allowed the marriage; that his daughter’s
sentiments had been sufficiently known to him to render
him culpable in authorising it; that in so doing he
had sacrificed the right to the expedient, and been
governed by motives of selfishness and worldly wisdom.
These were reflections that required some time to soften;
but time will do almost everything; and though little
comfort arose on Mrs. Rushworth’s side for the
misery she had occasioned, comfort was to be found
greater than he had supposed in his other children.
Julia’s match became a less desperate business
than he had considered it at first. She was humble,
and wishing to be forgiven; and Mr. Yates, desirous
of being really received into the family, was disposed
to look up to him and be guided. He was not very
solid; but there was a hope of his becoming less trifling,
of his being at least tolerably domestic and quiet;
and at any rate, there was comfort in finding his estate
rather more, and his debts much less, than he had feared,
and in being consulted and treated as the friend best
worth attending to. There was comfort also in
Tom, who gradually regained his health, without regaining
the thoughtlessness and selfishness of his previous
habits. He was the better for ever for his illness.
He had suffered, and he had learned to think:
two advantages that he had never known before; and
the self-reproach arising from the deplorable event
in Wimpole Street, to which he felt himself accessory
by all the dangerous intimacy of his unjustifiable
theatre, made an impression on his mind which, at
the age of six-and-twenty, with no want of sense or
good companions, was durable in its happy effects.
He became what he ought to be: useful to his
father, steady and quiet, and not living merely for
himself.
Here was comfort indeed! and quite
as soon as Sir Thomas could place dependence on such
sources of good, Edmund was contributing to his father’s
ease by improvement in the only point in which he
had given him pain before— improvement
in his spirits. After wandering about and sitting
under trees with Fanny all the summer evenings, he
had so well talked his mind into submission as to be
very tolerably cheerful again.
These were the circumstances and the
hopes which gradually brought their alleviation to
Sir Thomas, deadening his sense of what was lost,
and in part reconciling him to himself; though the
anguish arising from the conviction of his own errors
in the education of his daughters was never to be
entirely done away.
Too late he became aware how unfavourable
to the character of any young people must be the totally
opposite treatment which Maria and Julia had been
always experiencing at home, where the excessive indulgence
and flattery of their aunt had been continually contrasted
with his own severity. He saw how ill he had
judged, in expecting to counteract what was wrong
in Mrs. Norris by its reverse in himself; clearly
saw that he had but increased the evil by teaching
them to repress their spirits in his presence so as
to make their real disposition unknown to him, and
sending them for all their indulgences to a person
who had been able to attach them only by the blindness
of her affection, and the excess of her praise.
Here had been grievous mismanagement;
but, bad as it was, he gradually grew to feel that
it had not been the most direful mistake in his plan
of education. Something must have been wanting
within, or time would have worn away much of
its ill effect. He feared that principle, active
principle, had been wanting; that they had never been
properly taught to govern their inclinations and tempers
by that sense of duty which can alone suffice.
They had been instructed theoretically in their religion,
but never required to bring it into daily practice.
To be distinguished for elegance and accomplishments,
the authorised object of their youth, could have had
no useful influence that way, no moral effect on the
mind. He had meant them to be good, but his cares
had been directed to the understanding and manners,
not the disposition; and of the necessity of self-denial
and humility, he feared they had never heard from
any lips that could profit them.
Bitterly did he deplore a deficiency
which now he could scarcely comprehend to have been
possible. Wretchedly did he feel, that with all
the cost and care of an anxious and expensive education,
he had brought up his daughters without their understanding
their first duties, or his being acquainted with their
character and temper.
The high spirit and strong passions
of Mrs. Rushworth, especially, were made known to
him only in their sad result. She was not to
be prevailed on to leave Mr. Crawford. She hoped
to marry him, and they continued together till she
was obliged to be convinced that such hope was vain,
and till the disappointment and wretchedness arising
from the conviction rendered her temper so bad, and
her feelings for him so like hatred, as to make them
for a while each other’s punishment, and then
induce a voluntary separation.
She had lived with him to be reproached
as the ruin of all his happiness in Fanny, and carried
away no better consolation in leaving him than that
she had divided them. What can exceed
the misery of such a mind in such a situation?
Mr. Rushworth had no difficulty in
procuring a divorce; and so ended a marriage contracted
under such circumstances as to make any better end
the effect of good luck not to be reckoned on.
She had despised him, and loved another; and he had
been very much aware that it was so. The indignities
of stupidity, and the disappointments of selfish passion,
can excite little pity. His punishment followed
his conduct, as did a deeper punishment the deeper
guilt of his wife. He was released from the
engagement to be mortified and unhappy, till some other
pretty girl could attract him into matrimony again,
and he might set forward on a second, and, it is to
be hoped, more prosperous trial of the state:
if duped, to be duped at least with good humour and
good luck; while she must withdraw with infinitely
stronger feelings to a retirement and reproach which
could allow no second spring of hope or character.
Where she could be placed became a
subject of most melancholy and momentous consultation.
Mrs. Norris, whose attachment seemed to augment with
the demerits of her niece, would have had her received
at home and countenanced by them all. Sir Thomas
would not hear of it; and Mrs. Norris’s anger
against Fanny was so much the greater, from considering
her residence there as the motive. She
persisted in placing his scruples to her account,
though Sir Thomas very solemnly assured her that,
had there been no young woman in question, had there
been no young person of either sex belonging to him,
to be endangered by the society or hurt by the character
of Mrs. Rushworth, he would never have offered so great
an insult to the neighbourhood as to expect it to
notice her. As a daughter, he hoped a penitent
one, she should be protected by him, and secured in
every comfort, and supported by every encouragement
to do right, which their relative situations admitted;
but farther than that he could not go.
Maria had destroyed her own character, and he would
not, by a vain attempt to restore what never could
be restored, by affording his sanction to vice, or
in seeking to lessen its disgrace, be anywise accessory
to introducing such misery in another man’s
family as he had known himself.
It ended in Mrs. Norris’s resolving
to quit Mansfield and devote herself to her unfortunate
Maria, and in an establishment being formed for them
in another country, remote and private, where, shut
up together with little society, on one side no affection,
on the other no judgment, it may be reasonably supposed
that their tempers became their mutual punishment.
Mrs. Norris’s removal from Mansfield
was the great supplementary comfort of Sir Thomas’s
life. His opinion of her had been sinking from
the day of his return from Antigua: in every
transaction together from that period, in their daily
intercourse, in business, or in chat, she had been
regularly losing ground in his esteem, and convincing
him that either time had done her much disservice,
or that he had considerably over-rated her sense,
and wonderfully borne with her manners before.
He had felt her as an hourly evil, which was so much
the worse, as there seemed no chance of its ceasing
but with life; she seemed a part of himself that must
be borne for ever. To be relieved from her, therefore,
was so great a felicity that, had she not left bitter
remembrances behind her, there might have been danger
of his learning almost to approve the evil which produced
such a good.
She was regretted by no one at Mansfield.
She had never been able to attach even those she
loved best; and since Mrs. Rushworth’s elopement,
her temper had been in a state of such irritation
as to make her everywhere tormenting. Not even
Fanny had tears for aunt Norris, not even when she
was gone for ever.
That Julia escaped better than Maria
was owing, in some measure, to a favourable difference
of disposition and circumstance, but in a greater
to her having been less the darling of that very aunt,
less flattered and less spoilt. Her beauty and
acquirements had held but a second place. She
had been always used to think herself a little inferior
to Maria. Her temper was naturally the easiest
of the two; her feelings, though quick, were more
controllable, and education had not given her so very
hurtful a degree of self-consequence.
She had submitted the best to the
disappointment in Henry Crawford. After the
first bitterness of the conviction of being slighted
was over, she had been tolerably soon in a fair way
of not thinking of him again; and when the acquaintance
was renewed in town, and Mr. Rushworth’s house
became Crawford’s object, she had had the merit
of withdrawing herself from it, and of chusing that
time to pay a visit to her other friends, in order
to secure herself from being again too much attracted.
This had been her motive in going to her cousin’s.
Mr. Yates’s convenience had had nothing to do
with it. She had been allowing his attentions
some time, but with very little idea of ever accepting
him; and had not her sister’s conduct burst
forth as it did, and her increased dread of her father
and of home, on that event, imagining its certain
consequence to herself would be greater severity and
restraint, made her hastily resolve on avoiding such
immediate horrors at all risks, it is probable that
Mr. Yates would never have succeeded. She had
not eloped with any worse feelings than those of selfish
alarm. It had appeared to her the only thing
to be done. Maria’s guilt had induced Julia’s
folly.
Henry Crawford, ruined by early independence
and bad domestic example, indulged in the freaks of
a cold-blooded vanity a little too long. Once
it had, by an opening undesigned and unmerited, led
him into the way of happiness. Could he have
been satisfied with the conquest of one amiable woman’s
affections, could he have found sufficient exultation
in overcoming the reluctance, in working himself into
the esteem and tenderness of Fanny Price, there would
have been every probability of success and felicity
for him. His affection had already done something.
Her influence over him had already given him some
influence over her. Would he have deserved more,
there can be no doubt that more would have been obtained,
especially when that marriage had taken place, which
would have given him the assistance of her conscience
in subduing her first inclination, and brought them
very often together. Would he have persevered,
and uprightly, Fanny must have been his reward, and
a reward very voluntarily bestowed, within a reasonable
period from Edmund’s marrying Mary.
Had he done as he intended, and as
he knew he ought, by going down to Everingham after
his return from Portsmouth, he might have been deciding
his own happy destiny. But he was pressed to
stay for Mrs. Fraser’s party; his staying was
made of flattering consequence, and he was to meet
Mrs. Rushworth there. Curiosity and vanity were
both engaged, and the temptation of immediate pleasure
was too strong for a mind unused to make any sacrifice
to right: he resolved to defer his Norfolk journey,
resolved that writing should answer the purpose of
it, or that its purpose was unimportant, and staid.
He saw Mrs. Rushworth, was received by her with a
coldness which ought to have been repulsive, and have
established apparent indifference between them for
ever; but he was mortified, he could not bear to be
thrown off by the woman whose smiles had been so wholly
at his command: he must exert himself to subdue
so proud a display of resentment; it was anger on
Fanny’s account; he must get the better of it,
and make Mrs. Rushworth Maria Bertram again in her
treatment of himself.
In this spirit he began the attack,
and by animated perseverance had soon re-established
the sort of familiar intercourse, of gallantry, of
flirtation, which bounded his views; but in triumphing
over the discretion which, though beginning in anger,
might have saved them both, he had put himself in
the power of feelings on her side more strong than
he had supposed. She loved him; there was no
withdrawing attentions avowedly dear to her.
He was entangled by his own vanity, with as little
excuse of love as possible, and without the smallest
inconstancy of mind towards her cousin. To keep
Fanny and the Bertrams from a knowledge of what was
passing became his first object. Secrecy could
not have been more desirable for Mrs. Rushworth’s
credit than he felt it for his own. When he
returned from Richmond, he would have been glad to
see Mrs. Rushworth no more. All that followed
was the result of her imprudence; and he went off
with her at last, because he could not help it, regretting
Fanny even at the moment, but regretting her infinitely
more when all the bustle of the intrigue was over,
and a very few months had taught him, by the force
of contrast, to place a yet higher value on the sweetness
of her temper, the purity of her mind, and the excellence
of her principles.
That punishment, the public punishment
of disgrace, should in a just measure attend his
share of the offence is, we know, not one of the barriers
which society gives to virtue. In this world
the penalty is less equal than could be wished; but
without presuming to look forward to a juster appointment
hereafter, we may fairly consider a man of sense,
like Henry Crawford, to be providing for himself no
small portion of vexation and regret: vexation
that must rise sometimes to self-reproach, and regret
to wretchedness, in having so requited hospitality,
so injured family peace, so forfeited his best, most
estimable, and endeared acquaintance, and so lost
the woman whom he had rationally as well as passionately
loved.
After what had passed to wound and
alienate the two families, the continuance of the
Bertrams and Grants in such close neighbourhood would
have been most distressing; but the absence of the
latter, for some months purposely lengthened, ended
very fortunately in the necessity, or at least the
practicability, of a permanent removal. Dr. Grant,
through an interest on which he had almost ceased
to form hopes, succeeded to a stall in Westminster,
which, as affording an occasion for leaving Mansfield,
an excuse for residence in London, and an increase
of income to answer the expenses of the change, was
highly acceptable to those who went and those who
staid.
Mrs. Grant, with a temper to love
and be loved, must have gone with some regret from
the scenes and people she had been used to; but the
same happiness of disposition must in any place, and
any society, secure her a great deal to enjoy, and
she had again a home to offer Mary; and Mary had had
enough of her own friends, enough of vanity, ambition,
love, and disappointment in the course of the last
half-year, to be in need of the true kindness of her
sister’s heart, and the rational tranquillity
of her ways. They lived together; and when Dr.
Grant had brought on apoplexy and death, by three
great institutionary dinners in one week, they still
lived together; for Mary, though perfectly resolved
against ever attaching herself to a younger brother
again, was long in finding among the dashing representatives,
or idle heir-apparents, who were at the command of
her beauty, and her 20,000, any one who could satisfy
the better taste she had acquired at Mansfield, whose
character and manners could authorise a hope of the
domestic happiness she had there learned to estimate,
or put Edmund Bertram sufficiently out of her head.
Edmund had greatly the advantage of
her in this respect. He had not to wait and wish
with vacant affections for an object worthy to succeed
her in them. Scarcely had he done regretting
Mary Crawford, and observing to Fanny how impossible
it was that he should ever meet with such another
woman, before it began to strike him whether a very
different kind of woman might not do just as well,
or a great deal better: whether Fanny herself
were not growing as dear, as important to him in all
her smiles and all her ways, as Mary Crawford had
ever been; and whether it might not be a possible,
an hopeful undertaking to persuade her that her warm
and sisterly regard for him would be foundation enough
for wedded love.
I purposely abstain from dates on
this occasion, that every one may be at liberty to
fix their own, aware that the cure of unconquerable
passions, and the transfer of unchanging attachments,
must vary much as to time in different people.
I only entreat everybody to believe that exactly
at the time when it was quite natural that it should
be so, and not a week earlier, Edmund did cease to
care about Miss Crawford, and became as anxious to
marry Fanny as Fanny herself could desire.
With such a regard for her, indeed,
as his had long been, a regard founded on the most
endearing claims of innocence and helplessness, and
completed by every recommendation of growing worth,
what could be more natural than the change?
Loving, guiding, protecting her, as he had been doing
ever since her being ten years old, her mind in so
great a degree formed by his care, and her comfort
depending on his kindness, an object to him of such
close and peculiar interest, dearer by all his own
importance with her than any one else at Mansfield,
what was there now to add, but that he should learn
to prefer soft light eyes to sparkling dark ones.
And being always with her, and always talking confidentially,
and his feelings exactly in that favourable state
which a recent disappointment gives, those soft light
eyes could not be very long in obtaining the pre-eminence.
Having once set out, and felt that
he had done so on this road to happiness, there was
nothing on the side of prudence to stop him or make
his progress slow; no doubts of her deserving, no
fears of opposition of taste, no need of drawing new
hopes of happiness from dissimilarity of temper.
Her mind, disposition, opinions, and habits wanted
no half-concealment, no self-deception on the present,
no reliance on future improvement. Even in the
midst of his late infatuation, he had acknowledged
Fanny’s mental superiority. What must
be his sense of it now, therefore? She was of
course only too good for him; but as nobody minds
having what is too good for them, he was very steadily
earnest in the pursuit of the blessing, and it was
not possible that encouragement from her should be
long wanting. Timid, anxious, doubting as she
was, it was still impossible that such tenderness
as hers should not, at times, hold out the strongest
hope of success, though it remained for a later period
to tell him the whole delightful and astonishing truth.
His happiness in knowing himself to have been so
long the beloved of such a heart, must have been great
enough to warrant any strength of language in which
he could clothe it to her or to himself; it must have
been a delightful happiness. But there was happiness
elsewhere which no description can reach. Let
no one presume to give the feelings of a young woman
on receiving the assurance of that affection of which
she has scarcely allowed herself to entertain a hope.
Their own inclinations ascertained,
there were no difficulties behind, no drawback of
poverty or parent. It was a match which Sir Thomas’s
wishes had even forestalled. Sick of ambitious
and mercenary connexions, prizing more and more the
sterling good of principle and temper, and chiefly
anxious to bind by the strongest securities all that
remained to him of domestic felicity, he had pondered
with genuine satisfaction on the more than possibility
of the two young friends finding their natural consolation
in each other for all that had occurred of disappointment
to either; and the joyful consent which met Edmund’s
application, the high sense of having realised a great
acquisition in the promise of Fanny for a daughter,
formed just such a contrast with his early opinion
on the subject when the poor little girl’s coming
had been first agitated, as time is for ever producing
between the plans and decisions of mortals, for their
own instruction, and their neighbours’ entertainment.
Fanny was indeed the daughter that
he wanted. His charitable kindness had been
rearing a prime comfort for himself. His liberality
had a rich repayment, and the general goodness of
his intentions by her deserved it. He might
have made her childhood happier; but it had been an
error of judgment only which had given him the appearance
of harshness, and deprived him of her early love;
and now, on really knowing each other, their mutual
attachment became very strong. After settling
her at Thornton Lacey with every kind attention to
her comfort, the object of almost every day was to
see her there, or to get her away from it.
Selfishly dear as she had long been to Lady Bertram,
she could not be parted with willingly by her.
No happiness of son or niece could make her wish
the marriage. But it was possible to part with her,
because Susan remained to supply her place.
Susan became the stationary niece, delighted to be so;
and equally well adapted for it by a readiness of mind,
and an inclination for usefulness, as Fanny had been
by sweetness of temper, and strong feelings of gratitude.
Susan could never be spared. First as a comfort to Fanny,
then as an auxiliary, and last as her substitute,
she was established at Mansfield, with every appearance
of equal permanency. Her more fearless disposition
and happier nerves made everything easy to her there.
With quickness in understanding the tempers of those she
had to deal with, and no natural timidity to restrain
any consequent wishes, she was soon welcome and useful
to all; and after Fanny’s removal succeeded so naturally
to her influence over the hourly comfort of her aunt,
as gradually to become, perhaps, the most beloved of the two.
In her usefulness, in Fanny’s excellence, in William’s
continued good conduct and rising fame, and in the general
well-doing and success of the other members of the family,
all assisting to advance each other, and doing credit
to his countenance and aid, Sir Thomas saw repeated,
and for ever repeated, reason to rejoice in what he had
done for them all, and acknowledge the advantages of early
hardship and discipline, and the consciousness of being born
to struggle and endure.
With so much true merit and true love, and no want of
fortune and friends, the happiness of the married cousins
must appear as secure as earthly happiness can be.
Equally formed for domestic life, and attached to
country pleasures, their home was the home of affection
and comfort; and to complete the picture of good,
the acquisition of Mansfield living, by the death of
Dr. Grant, occurred just after they had been married long
enough to begin to want an increase of income, and feel
their distance from the paternal abode an inconvenience.
On that event they removed to Mansfield; and the Parsonage
there, which, under each of its two former owners, Fanny had
never been able to approach but with some painful sensation
of restraint or alarm, soon grew as dear to her heart,
and as thoroughly perfect in her eyes, as everything else
within the view and patronage of Mansfield Park had long been.
THE END